The Robin Masters Estate (Pahonu)

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Pahonu
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#466 Post by Pahonu »

Little Garwood wrote:
J.J. Walters wrote:Image
Is the smaller part of the house as viewed from the balcony the patio where Magnum and company have lunch in Novel Connection, or is it Higgins' study?
This is entirely from memory, but I don't think either. I recall them having lunch in a space off the living room set. A pair of double glazed doors open from the end of the living room opposite the fireplace. Both rooms were sets, I believe, as neither one could physically exist in the actual structure. They would be in the courtyard area of the real home! I think this was discussed in another thread?

This is a good question, though. Did any Magnum episodes use this patio area of the one-story wing of the main house? I recall the series finale of Hawaii Five-O having a scene in this area, but not Magnum.
Last edited by Pahonu on Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Styles Bitchley
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#467 Post by Styles Bitchley »

Anyone know if there's a thread specifically discussing Higgins' study? I'm looking for some screen caps.
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Sam
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#468 Post by Sam »

Here is the cap from the episode guide of "Novel Connection"

Short video from HFO..Woe to Wo Fat"

Image
Last edited by Sam on Mon Dec 04, 2017 11:14 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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Pahonu
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#469 Post by Pahonu »

Thanks Sam. The second, Hawaii Five-0, picture is obviously from the patio location in the one-story wing. The first, I think, is a set. One clue is its small size compared to the large patio in the actual house. Another clue is the pair of doors on the left swing in. The estate has pocket doors in this location. Last, at the top of the column in the second picture is an arch, but this area of the main house is flat above the columns.

If it is a set as I think, it is a rarely used one. Does anyone recall another episode using this "dining patio" set? Birdman of Budapest pops to mind, but I'm not certain.

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#470 Post by Sam »

Hi Pahonu,

I'm sure it is a set.Three episodes come to mind.

Faith and Begorrah,Birdman of Budapest and The Aunt Who Came to Dinner.
I don't have a cap for Dinner.

Image

Image
Last edited by Sam on Mon Dec 04, 2017 11:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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steveadl
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#471 Post by steveadl »

Wow guys, check out Sam's first pic from 'A Novel Connection' - poor woman doesn't seem to be quite herself....the headless horseman comes to mind! :D

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Pahonu
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#472 Post by Pahonu »

Sam wrote:Hi Pahonu,

I'm sure it is a set.Three episodes come to mind.

Faith and Begorrah,Birdman of Budapest and The Aunt Who Came to Dinner.
I don't have a cap for Dinner.

Image

Image
It most certainly is. You can see the living room set behind it in the second picture. Three episodes was more than I could remember, Sam. Good job! Still a rarely used set, I would say. It was Garwood who was wondering if it was the actual estate patio.

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#473 Post by Little Garwood »

Pahonu wrote: The first, I think, is a set. One clue is its small size compared to the large patio in the actual house. Another clue is the pair of doors on the left swing in. The estate has pocket doors in this location. Last, at the top of the column in the second picture is an arch, but this area of the main house is flat above the columns.

If it is a set as I think, it is a rarely used one. Does anyone recall another episode using this "dining patio" set?
I was sure it was a set, but was trying to determine--in the wacky world of continuity--the locale in terms of the scarce clues given in various episodes. Thanks for all the great responses! :)
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#474 Post by Steve »

I caught part of the original Hawaii Five-O today on TV and the episode Cloth of Gold. As was mentioned earlier in this thread about 3/4 of the episode takes palce at The Estate, inside and out. It's interesting how The Dowager Lady Anderson allowed the HFO crew access to the inside in so many episodes. There was one good shot of the tidal pool where the water is so far out that the front part of the poop stoop (my term for the concrete square) is on the beach and there looks to be only about twenty feet from the beach/water line to the breakwater.............

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#475 Post by Pahonu »

Steve, your comment on the sea level relative to the concrete square is interesting. It's been nearly forty years since Cloth of Gold aired! Geologists have estimated that sea level has risen from 40 to 100 mm in that span, which could translate to a one to two meter narrowing of the beach. This doesn't even consider sand movement from storms and other causes.

Check out this article: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/0 ... ory01.html

I appears winter storms can pull away huge amounts of sand and then redeposit them cyclically. This might explain some of the drastic changes we've seen to the estate beach over the years.

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#476 Post by Styles Bitchley »

Pahonu wrote:This might explain some of the drastic changes we've seen to the estate beach over the years.
Possibly. But I would expect that the turtle wall would block any major surges from ripping away a significant amount of sand.
"How fiendishly deceptive of you Magnum. I could have sworn I was hearing the emasculation of a large rodent."

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Pahonu
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#477 Post by Pahonu »

Styles Bitchley wrote:
Pahonu wrote:This might explain some of the drastic changes we've seen to the estate beach over the years.
Possibly. But I would expect that the turtle wall would block any major surges from ripping away a significant amount of sand.
Good point, but with rising sea level the wall is completely submerged at high tide now, as someone else reported. This would slow, but not stop, sand erosion and I can't imagine the wall would have been designed to be submerged. How would that keep turtles in? I do understand, though, it's not original and has been rebuilt.

I am still not convinced the area was dredged as so many have argued. The biggest reason is the exposed rocks remaining after the sand was eroded. I have watched the big dredging machines at the marinas here in Long Beach several times, and they pick up everything, mud, eel grass, trash and rocks when they sweep through. The bottom looks smooth when they're finished. Very unlike the exposed rocks at the estate. I am also swayed by the fact that the area leading into the gated beach entrance is a series of concrete steps that becomes covered and exposed by sand depending on the sand level that season. The designer expected some significant shift in sand and beach width to have placed those concrete steps there. It's also important to remember we have no idea what that beach looked like for the first 35 years the estate was there. We saw it in Magnum for a brief 8-year window of its near 80-year existence. I think we consider what we saw then the norm, but it almost certainly is not. The beach could have been significantly wider in 1933. The concrete square might not have even been in the water most or all of the time.

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#478 Post by Little Garwood »

What is the purpose of the concrete square? Someone referred to it as a "poop stoop." That can't be it, could it?
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#479 Post by steveadl »

Pahonu wrote:

I am still not convinced the area was dredged as so many have argued. The biggest reason is the exposed rocks remaining after the sand was eroded. I have watched the big dredging machines at the marinas here in Long Beach several times, and they pick up everything, mud, eel grass, trash and rocks when they sweep through. The bottom looks smooth when they're finished.
Good point. Plus does anyone more familiar with Hawaii state dept's know the answer to this: whilst I know they perform dredging and sand placement on popular public beaches, I doubt the Anderson Estate's small beach would qualify for publicly funded dredging? And since Mrs Anderson (no disrespect intended) has let the estate fall into such a state of disrepair, I doubt she's going to fork out how many tens of thousands for the equipment and man power needed to have the beach dredged just on a whim when it wouldn't have been necessary?

I suppose you could argue they dredged the sand there because they needed to go dump it in Waikiki, but I'd say there would be plenty more easily accessible and larger beaches throughout the island for the purpose of sand collection.

Just my opinion.

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#480 Post by wind4fuel »

Little Garwood wrote:What is the purpose of the concrete square? Someone referred to it as a "poop stoop." That can't be it, could it?
I think it is for tying boats to or could be part of a pier. In one of the photo's you can see a pier by the boat house.

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